Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan ordered the Air Force to strike 34 people in
Uludere last year based on intelligence that there was a high-profile militant
among the group, Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) co-chair Selahattin Demirtaş
said today.

“It was said that there was a high-profile PKK [outlawed
Kurdistan Workers’ Party] member among [the group], but information about other
civilians was also given to the prime minister,” Demirtaş said during protests
in the southeastern district on the incident’s first anniversary, daily Radikal
has reported.

Demirtaş also said then-District Gov. Naif Yavuz had
claimed the evidence pointing to those responsible seemed fairly obvious in the
matter but that the official was banished to western Turkey after the incident.

The Chief of General Staff was also informed about the
raid, the BDP co-chair added.

Some 34 civilian Kurdish villagers were killed in the air
strike on Dec. 28, 2011, when they were allegedly mistaken for PKK militants as
they were smuggling oil from northern Iraq into Turkey.

Thousands protest air strike in Turkey

An official says thousands are protesting the government on the first anniversary of a botched Turkish military air strike aimed at suspected members of outlawed Kurdistan Worker's Party that instead killed 34 civilians, The Associated Press reported.

Protesters are denouncing the government’s failure to keep a promise to investigate the incident and hold those responsible to account for the attack that struck a group of smugglers - most of them youngsters - who were crossing the border into Turkey from Iraq with mules.

Kurdish legislator Nazmi Gür said several thousand people were marching Friday to a cemetery near the border with Iraq. Dogan news agency video footage showed protesters shouting anti-government slogans.

The New-York based Human Rights Watch has also called on the government to launch "an effective and transparent inquiry" into the attack.